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AI sci-fi doomsday scenario? Call this expert skeptical

鈥楾hat鈥檚 a sci-fi narrative and I am empathetic, but I just don鈥檛 think it鈥檚 true鈥
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The head of Canadian artificial intelligence darling Cohere says the technology is not bound to exceed human capabilities any time soon and if it does, he鈥檚 skeptical any sci-fi like scenarios will arise.

The prediction from Aidan Gomez came Tuesday at the Collision tech conference in Toronto, where the Cohere co-founder and chief executive spoke of how AI models are on track to become smarter and even more capable.

However, he feels those advances have led to a 鈥減hilosophical鈥 divide among the industry, which has been rife with debate about where the technology is headed 鈥 and how fast.

鈥淚鈥檓 of the opinion that it鈥檚 going to take us a while to exceed human capabilities uniformly,鈥 Gomez said.

The more gains the technology makes, the more likely it is to spark an existential crisis, some, including AI pioneer Geoffrey Hinton, have argued.

But Gomez, whose company has received funding from Hinton and whose co-founder Nick Frosst was one of Hinton鈥檚 proteges, rebutted those views Tuesday.

Gomez described himself as 鈥渕ore skeptical about the bad, the doomsday scenarios and the fear mongering, the 鈥楾erminator鈥 style narratives鈥 鈥 a reference to the 1984 film, where a cyborg assassin from the future targets a woman whose unborn son will lead the human resistance against a machine-led uprising.

鈥淭he notion that the technology is going to start self-improving, that it鈥檚 going to start manipulating people, that it鈥檚 going to take over, seize power and displace humans, that鈥檚 a sci-fi narrative and I am empathetic,鈥 Gomez said.

鈥淏ut I just don鈥檛 think it鈥檚 true.鈥

He also rejected the idea that the rise of AI will upend the job market, resulting in mass unemployment, but he conceded some sectors will see reductions.

鈥淚鈥檓 a big believer in augmentation and not displacement, so I don鈥檛 foresee people losing jobs,鈥 he said.

He explained that his view was shaped by the fact that many countries have low unemployment levels.

鈥淲e want to be doing more and we don鈥檛 have the people to do it and so we need to make the people we do have much more productive,鈥 he said.

Gomez鈥檚 remarks come as AI continues to be a hot topic with companies looking at how to better use the tool to bring efficiencies to their business and countries considering whether the technology will have unintended consequences they must prepare for.

Many in the industry have predicted AI will create or exacerbate bias, discrimination, echo chambers, fake news, terrorism and security threats.

Gomez鈥檚 opinions carry a lot of weight within the tech sector because he is best known for co-authoring a research paper at the age of 20 that delved into the then-novel concept of the transformer 鈥 a facet of language processing that can identify relationships between sequential data like words in a sentence.

Later, he co-founded Cohere, which develops AI for enterprise use, meaning it helps businesses build powerful applications by using large language models (LLMs) 鈥 algorithms that use massive data sets to recognize, translate, predict or generate text and other content.

The Toronto-based business鈥檚 valuation surpassed $2.1 billion last year, making Gomez鈥檚 talk one of the buzziest scheduled for Collision.

Also expected on stage this week are Hinton, tennis star Maria Sharapova and Indigenous rights advocate Autumn Peltier

This year marks the final year the travelling conference that made its Toronto debut in 2019 will be hosted in the city.

Organizers have said the event will shift to Vancouver next year and be transformed into a North American iteration of the Web Summit conferences hosted in Portugal, Brazil and Qatar.

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